26 Feb 2022

US-NATO war threats against Russia heighten geopolitical crisis in South Asia

Deepal Jayasekera


The geo-politics of South Asia are increasingly being roiled by the all-sided US-NATO diplomatic, economic, and military-strategic offensive against Russia.

Following the Putin regime’s invasion of Ukraine this week, the Biden administration has ratcheted up pressure on India, which Washington has successfully harnessed to its drive to strategically isolate and encircle China, to line up full-square behind its war drive against Moscow.

India’s Narendra Modi-led Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government and the Indian bourgeoisie view New Delhi’s burgeoning ties with Washington as their most important strategic partnership, and pivotal to realizing their great-power ambitions. However, India also has a much longer and in some important respects, including military ties, closer relationship with Russia.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaking in Houston in 2019. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke)

As the confrontation between the US, its NATO allies and Russia has intensified in recent months, the Modi government has tried to maintain a precarious balancing act. To the chagrin and increasing anger of Washington, New Delhi has thus far resisted US demands it condemn Russia’s actions, including at the UN Security Council where India currently holds one of the rotating seats.

At the press conference Thursday where US President Joe Biden announced stringent sanctions against Russia, he was asked whether India was fully in sync with the US stance against Moscow. Biden responded, “We’re in consultation with India today. We haven’t resolved that completely.”

According to a US State Department statement, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with his Indian counterpart, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, on the same day to stress “the importance of a strong collective response to condemn Russia’s invasion and call for an immediate withdrawal and ceasefire.”

The US pressed India to support a resolution, presented to a United Nations Security Council (UNSC) meeting Friday, condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But New Delhi abstained, whilst Russia exercised its veto.

In a clear warning that the US would not be satisfied with anything other than India fully lining up with it against Russia, Biden added at his Thursday press briefing, “Any nation that countenances Russia’s naked aggression against Ukraine will be stained by association.” A State Department spokesperson added, “We are continuing to consult with our Indian counterparts on a collective response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.”

Washington calculates that bringing India to heel over Russia will further weaken and isolate Moscow economically, politically and strategically. Breaking India’s decades-long close ties with Russia will also further reduce New Delhi to little more than a US client state, and effectively drive the nail into the casket of its much-vaunted “strategic autonomy.”

At an earlier UNSC debate on Tuesday, India did not join the US, UK, Germany and other members in denouncing Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to recognize the “independence” declarations of the “People’s Republics” of Donetsk and Lugansk—two pro-Russian, separatist-held areas in the Donbas region of Ukraine. At the same time, India refrained from offering any endorsement of Putin’s actions. Without specifically mentioning who has been involved in the “escalation of tensions,” India’s UN representative, T.S. Tirumurti, called for “all sides … to ensure … a mutually amicable solution … at the earliest.”

Knowing full well that India will be compelled to take sides if the war tensions being whipped up by the US and its NATO allies lead to a military conflict between the US and Russia, New Delhi is desperately hoping to avoid such a situation.

As part of India’s efforts to prevent an open military conflict involving the US and Russia, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi phoned Russian President Vladimir Putin Thursday to call for “a dialogue and ceasefire.” His External Affairs Minister, Jaishankar, also said he had spoken to his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, to “underline that dialogue and diplomacy are the best way forward.”

Irrespective of India’s hopes for “a mutually amicable solution,” US imperialism will be satisfied with nothing short of the complete subjugation of Russia under its dominance. Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union by the Stalinist bureaucracy three decades ago, Washington has been working systematically towards bringing the entire Eurasian region under its hegemony by aggressively expanding its military might into Eastern Europe. A key part of this strategy involves the carve-up of Russia into a series of smaller statelets that will prove easier to subjugate.

The US has increased its pressure on India to line up with it against Russia over recent years, as India has been transformed into a veritable frontline state in the US military-strategic offensive against China. Building on the “Indo-US global strategic partnership” forged by the Congress Party-led government that preceded it, the Modi regime has developed an ever-expanding web of bilateral, trilateral, and quadrilateral military-security ties with the US, and its closest Asia Pacific allies, Japan and Australia. This includes the “Quad,” an informal US-led anti-China military-security bloc.

Prior to the current crisis, US pressure on India to downgrade its ties with Russia focused on its purchase of Russia’s S-400 missile defence system. Despite US protests and threats that India could face US sanctions under the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA), India has recently received and deployed the first of several Russian-made S-400 batteries.

Some US officials previously hinted that India could get an exemption from CAATSA sanctions over the S-400 deal, because of the staunch support it is lending to US efforts to counter China, including by working with Washington to counter Beijing’s influence in South Asia and beyond. But that now is all in question. Indeed, American officials have begun to raise the possibility of sanctioning India over the S-400 as a way of punishing it for its refusal to do Washington’s bidding in the conflict over Ukraine.

The Indian ruling elite sees its close ties with Russia as vital to maintaining its military capabilities. While India has been promised access to US-made high-tech military equipment with its designation as a “major defence partner” of Washington, it still largely depends on military supplies from Russia. Moreover, Moscow has a proven record of jointly developing and sharing high-tech weaponry with India. According to a study by the Stimson Center, Russia remains the origin of around 86 percent of India’s military equipment. India’s civil nuclear program also relies heavily on supplies of technology from Russia.

Fearing that sanctions by the US and its allies could disrupt crucial fertilizer imports from Russia, Indian officials are reportedly exploring the establishment of a rupee payment mechanism to maintain trade with Russia.

Some sections of the Indian ruling elite, although still a minority, argue that India must more directly take the side of the US against Russia so as to better advance its geopolitical interests.

C. Raja Mohan, a leading Indian commentator on geopolitical issues, wrote in the Indian Express on Tuesday, “As diplomatic efforts to de-escalate the crisis in Ukraine continue, the time has come for Delhi to devote greater attention to Central Europe, which is at the heart of the contestation between Russia and the West. Delhi can’t forever view this critical region through the prism of Russia’s conflict with the West. It must come to terms with its growing strategic significance.”

In an earlier opinion article published in The Print on February 7, Rajesh Rajagopalan stated, “The argument that India’s strategic autonomy requires high level of defence relations with Russia is stupid. It’s time to reduce arms dependence [on Russia].” Insisting that India must coordinate its policies more closely with Washington, he added, “Indian policy has to be based on what the US is likely to do, not what it would like them to do.”

India’s archrival in South Asia, Pakistan, is also desperately trying to avoid openly taking sides in the growing conflict between US and Russia. While still maintaining its military-intelligence ties with the US, Pakistan, partially as a response to the India-US alliance, is increasingly turning towards Moscow. For its part, Russia justifies its closer ties with Pakistan, despite India’s objections, by citing India’s alliance with US imperialism.

Beijing, which has a decades-long “all weather partnership” with Islamabad and is increasingly working with Russia to counter the common threat they face from the US, has helped facilitate the recent Russo-Pakistani rapprochement.

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan arrived in Moscow on Wednesday for a two-day visit, the first such trip by a Pakistani premier in two decades. Although the visit had been planned well in advance of the Russia-Ukraine war, it assumed special significance in light of the conflict.

On the eve of the visit, Khan dismissed the current crisis over Ukraine. He said in an interview given to Zee News, “This doesn’t concern us, we have a bilateral relation with Russia and we really want to strengthen it.” In another interview with Russia’s state-owned RT television network, he said, “I am hoping that this Ukrainian crisis is resolved peacefully.”

On Thursday, Khan had his first-ever summit with Putin, and “discussed the main aspects of bilateral cooperation and exchanged views on current regional topics, including developments in South Asia,” according to a statement issued by Moscow.

A Pakistani government statement on the visit noted that Khan “regretted” the latest situation between Russia and Ukraine. “The Prime Minister stressed that conflict was not in anyone’s interest, and that the developing countries were always hit the hardest economically in case of conflict. He underlined Pakistan’s belief that disputes should be resolved through dialogue and diplomacy,” the statement continued.

While India and Pakistan are attempting to avoid taking sides as the threat of war mounts between the US-NATO and Russia, US imperialism’s reckless drive to war threatens to drag the entire globe, including South Asia, into a military conflagration fought with nuclear weapons.

Positioned adjacent to China, South Asia is a crucial region for Washington in its drive to diplomatically, economically and militarily isolate Beijing. American imperialist pre-eminence in South Asia would give Washington the ability to control critical sea lanes in the Indian Ocean that serve as lifelines for Chinese imports from, and exports to, the world market. Its proximity to Russia also makes the region a well-placed vantage point from which to dominate the entire Eurasian landmass.

New CDC mask guidelines lifts mandates for most regions in the US

Benjamin Mateus


On Friday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced new guidelines which end mask mandates for almost 70 percent of the US population. The shift in policy is not necessarily based on any fundamental scientific principles that have ascertained that masks are ineffective or no longer necessary to stop the spread of COVID-19. Instead, as noted by the Washington Post, it is intended to conform to a “process that state and local officials had already begun amid demands for a return to normalcy.”

People wait in a long line to get a COVID-19 test, Monday, Jan. 3, 2022, in North Miami, Fla. (AP Photo/Marta Lavandier)

However, most Americans continue to support mask wearing. The most recent poll by CBS News-YouGov found that 56 percent of respondents said that their state should maintain mask mandates. Additionally, 57 percent of parents of school-aged children felt it should be required in schools.

Previously, the CDC map of US states and counties stratified by risk categories for community transmission was based on COVID-19 case rates per capita or positivity rates. The color-coded map shown in Figure 1represents the CDC’s US COVID-19 community level map from last week, February 16, 2022. Almost every county (more than 95 percent) in the country is in the substantial or high-level zone, where the CDC would have advised masking indoors.

Figure 1: CDC US COVID-19 community levels by county 16 Feb 2022

The substantial transmission category was defined as 50 to 99 weekly cases per 100,000 residents or a positivity rate between 8.0 to 9.9 percent. The high transmission level was defined as 100 or more per capita or a positivity rate at 10 or more percent. If the two metrics demonstrated different transmission levels in a region, the CDC guidance deemed selecting the higher level.

Suddenly, the new CDC color-coded map now shows most counties have shifted to either a medium- or low-risk category with the flick of a switch. There has been a remarkable sleight of hand as the old maps are no longer available on their site for comparison. The change in assessing community risk now “weigh hospitalizations for COVID-19 and the proportion of beds occupied by COVID-19 patients in local hospitals more heavily than rates of new infections alone,” as explained by NPR.

Figure 2: CDC US COVID-19 community levels by county 24 Feb 2022

CDC Director Rochelle Walensky reiterated at a press briefing yesterday, “We want to give people a break from things like mask-wearing.” She added, “As the virus continues to circulate in our communities, we must focus our metrics beyond just cases in the community and direct our efforts toward protecting people at high risk for severe illness and presenting COVID-19 from overwhelming our hospitals and our health care systems.”

This is an unprecedented development in public health where the number of infections has been made redundant and meaningless. It functions to enact the political policy of “herd immunity” which will see the virus made a permanent fixture.

And regardless of the region in the country people reside in, those who are immunocompromised or at high risk for severe disease have essentially been told they should have a plan for rapid testing and seek advice from their health care providers about wearing masks and taking other precautions. They will have to fend for themselves, as far as the Biden administration is concerned.

There has been a significant backlash from public health officials, immunocompromised people and those with substantial co-morbidities that feel the mandates are being lifted prematurely. More than 1,800 Americans on average are dying every day from the disease.

Dr. Eric Feigl-Ding, who has been an outspoken proponent of keeping mitigation measures in place to check COVID-19 community transmission, wrote, “I never thought the CDC would gaslight us like this. Dr. Walensky, what are you doing?” He added, “Seriously, the CDC needs to improve its abysmal track record. CDC staffers should honestly oppose the gaslighting nonsense happening from the top right now. Dr. Walensky, who would have thought we would have a CDC director like you in the middle of an ongoing pandemic who would fabricate that COVID is over.”

The move by the CDC is not so much a surprise as it is audacious. They are flagrantly attempting to pull the wool over the public’s eyes with their sudden change in masking guidelines.

Though transmissions have declined considerably, the 7-day average remains high, at over 70,000 cases per day. So far this month, more than 50,000 have died as the US inches closer each day to the 1 million mark. Combined with January, the new year has already seen more than 120,000 Americans killed by the virus. Additionally, only 65.5 percent of the population is fully vaccinated with only two doses, and 28.4 percent have received a booster or a third shot. Most Americans must be considered partially vaccinated in an Omicron dominant pandemic with its ability to evade immunity.

The Biden administration and the CDC are lifting restrictions to ensure schools are open and working parents are back at their jobs producing. However, the experience in the pandemic so far shows that new variants of COVID-19 will emerge with the following variant more contagious and, despite attempts to sell Omicron as mildstill virulent and deadly.

The year 2021 saw even more Americans die from COVID-19 than the first year of the pandemic despite the promises heralded by the development and distribution of vaccines. More working-age Americans died last year, and more children died last year and continue to die at horrific rates. When one compares flu deaths among those under 18 to COVID-19 deaths, 5 versus 1,346, the difference is almost 270-fold. And yet, children under five, who as a group represent nearly a third of pediatric deaths, have no vaccines to protect them.

Additionally, immunocompromised people are being left to fend for themselves. They represent 3 percent of the population in the United States or around 10 million people who are considered moderately to severely immunocompromised. COVID-19 is a community disease, and as such, they are at significant risk, under the current guidelines, to be exposed to the virus and suffer substantial consequences, regardless of their vaccination status.

Dr. Walensky neglects to mention that COVID-19 infections, regardless of the mild nature of the illness experience, take a significant toll on the immune system and other organs of the human body.

The disease has recently been shown to severely injure children’s lungs who had recovered from their infections. Their ability to ventilate the air and perfuse their capillaries with oxygen is compromised.

Mild COVID-19 disease has even been shown to affect the cardiovascular system of adults. People are at considerable risk of heart attacks, dangerous changes in their heartbeats, blood clots and more up to a year after their infections. Data from life insurers showed that non-COVID-related deaths in the second half of 2021 had jumped three-fold compared to the year before.

Other studies have found that Long COVID can affect 10 percent of those who have brain fog and severe headaches that hinder their ability to live their lives without suffering. Already Long COVID clinics are reporting long waits for access to these specialty clinics rapidly coming online to serve an unmet medically severe condition.

Most tragically, the number of orphaned children globally affected by a caregiver’s death from COVID-19 has increased by 90 percent from the end of April (2,737,300) to the end of October 2021 (5,200,300). In the US, that total is shy of 150,000. The loss of a parent or other caregiver has a considerable impact on the future of these children.

In the above context, it bears repeating Dr. Walensky’s words, “None of us know what the future may hold for us and this virus. We need to be prepared and ready for whatever comes next. We want to give people a break from things like mask-wearing when levels are low, and then have the ability to reach for them again, should things get worse in the future.”

Indeed, Dr. Walensky knows full well the dangers posed by COVID-19 and what will occur to the US population by allowing the virus to spread unchecked.

Sri Lanka engulfed by power cuts and fuel shortages

Saman Gunadasa


Sri Lanka’s state-owned Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB), which began power cuts across the island last week, yesterday extended its daily shutdowns to 5 hours and 15 minutes.

The Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka, a government agency monitoring utility services, said that weekend power cuts would be limited to three hours during the day. However, it indicated that the situation could be more severe the next week, if the CEB does not secure adequate oil supplies for power generation.

The island nation faces fuel shortages because of its escalating debt and foreign currency crisis. Several power generating plants have ground to a halt or are running at under capacity. The country’s hydro power stations have also been adversely impacted by low dam levels caused by dry weather conditions.

Part of petrol queue at Colombo fuel station [Source: Facebook]

While electricity cuts and shortage of petroleum products have been frequent in recent months, the crisis has taken a more drastic turn, with the day-to-day activities of millions of people and their livelihoods disrupted.

Sri Lanka’s fuel shortage, diesel in particular, is impacting on transport with long queues outside fuel distribution stations. Yesterday National Water Supply and Drainage Board sources told the media that water supplies will be affected because of power disruptions at purifying plants and the lack of alternative electricity supplies.

Desperate to drive up foreign exchange earnings, the government has exempted export-processing free trade zones from the cuts. Big business fears have been reflected in sharp falls on the Sri Lankan stock market. On February 23, the stock market suffered its steepest fall with 700 billion rupees wiped off share values.

Sri Lankan plantation children learning by candle light at a tuition class. [Source: R.J. Kirushna Facebook]

An editorial in Thursday’s Daily Mirror entitled “Empty treasury, power cuts, fuel shortages and nonsense” declared that Sri Lanka “is running out of options regarding imports of basics which the country depends on like fuel, our staple food rice and medicines.” The warning reflected growing uneasiness by sections of the ruling elite that the crisis will generate another wave of working-class strikes and protests.

The heavily-indebted CEB has no money to buy diesel from Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC), which it in turn cannot secure finance to pay for oil in tankers already anchored in Colombo Port.

Confronting rising popular anger about the worsening situation, President Gotabhaya Rajapakse called an emergency cabinet meeting on Tuesday to discuss the country’s “financial situation.”

The media has released no details but one cabinet minister said the Treasury would provide the CPC with 80 billion rupees ($US395 million) in order could pay oil suppliers. This amount, however, will only secure one week’s supply. Along with oil, there are about 1,500 containers of essential foods and other basic items stuck in Colombo port due to the lack of foreign currency to pay for them.

Finance Minister Basil Rajapakse was scheduled to travel to New Delhi late this week to sign several agreements for a $1 billion line of credit to import food and medicines. The media reported that the visit had been delayed but provided no other details.

Petroleum Minister Udaya Gammanpila told the parliament this week that Sri Lanka needed $US1,285 million to pay for oil imports over the next three months with $US500 million coming from an Indian credit line. This money, however, will not be available until April.

The debt crisis confronting Colombo now faces further oil price increases from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Thursday in response to the US-led provocations.

Sri Lankan foreign exchange earnings dropped dramatically in 2020 as a result of the pandemic and saw the collapse of tourism and a severe decline of exports and remittances. While import costs have climbed, the main problem facing Colombo is massive foreign debt repayments.

Last month Finance Minister Rajapakse told the Financial Times that the government was “trying all options” to avoid a default of foreign debt and revealed that it had to pay $6.9 billion this year alone.

On February 8, the newspaper published another article warning that “Sri Lanka was on brink of sovereign bond default.” It noted that the country has $US15 billion, in mostly dollar denominated bonds, out of total foreign debt of $45 billion. The Sri Lankan government began taking loans through sovereign bonds about a decade ago.

In the last two years the Rajapakse government has responded to the worsening economic crisis by increasing its loans, via sovereign bonds and swap agreements. All of these were short-term arrangements and have only deepened the financial problems.

Colombo has also resorted to printing money—to the tune of 1.2 trillion rupees—to maintain artificially low interest rates and make money available for big business that has reaped huge profits. All this has resulted in a sharp devaluation of the rupee. Officially, it now costs 202 rupees for a US dollar, compared to 187 rupees a year ago. The unofficial rate, however, is 260 rupees to a dollar, a depreciation of nearly 40 percent.

The Rajapakse regime’s criminal response to the pandemic, like governments elsewhere, makes clear that it will step up its attempts to impose the burden of the economic crisis on workers and the poor. Rajapakse has proclaimed that the option is to “live with virus” and directed health authorities to remove even limited restrictions.

On February 23, daily COVID-19 infections rose to more than 1,300, despite abysmally low testing numbers, and around 30 daily deaths. Since Omicron appeared on the island, the total number of COVID-19 infections has climbed to over 650,000 and more than 16,000 people have died.

Rajapakse plans a new round of price hikes. While the CPC announced a 10 percent oil price increase in December, cabinet spokesman Ramesh Pathirana told the media there would be further rises in the “near future.” The CEB and Water Board are also planning price increases.

These rises will further drive up the cost of essentials and worsen the already unbearable burden on working people. According to official statistics, year on year inflation in January has risen to 16.8 percent, up from 14 percent in December. Food inflation climbed to 24.4 percent last month.

The establishment parliamentary parties are currently debating whether to immediately approach the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for more loans. Petroleum Minister Gammanpila told the media that “most of the cabinet ministers are for an IMF deal.”

The main parliamentary opposition Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB), a breakaway from the pro-US United National Party, is demagogically criticising the government, while arguing for assistance from all international financial intuitions, including the IMF, World Bank and Asian Development Bank.

The opposition Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, which promotes itself as an alternative Sri Lankan government, has offered to assist the Rajapakse administration to “overcome the grave economic crisis.”

Sri Lanka workers will be compelled to fight the next round of social attacks. Last year hundreds of thousands of workers state and private sector took industrial action and protested to demand higher wages and improved conditions.

Starting on February 7, over 65,000 health workers began indefinite strike action. This was shut down after nine days by the Federation of Health Professionals but faced with ongoing anger by health workers, the federation has been compelled to call a two-day strike next week.

Nervous about the snowballing economic crisis and developing class struggles, the Rajapakse government this week extended its Essentials Public Services Act against health service and electricity workers for another 10 days. At the same time, the Colombo district courts extended its ban on Government Nursing Officers Association participating in strikes and joining next week’s walkout.

NATO mobilizes troops as UK MPs, US congressmen call for air war against Russia

Andre Damon


Three days into the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the conflict is showing dangerous signs of spiraling into a much wider war.

Members of the 82nd Airborne Division of the U.S. Army prepare for deployment to Poland from Fort Bragg, N.C. on Monday, Feb. 14, 2022. They are among soldiers the Department of Defense is sending in a demonstration of American commitment to NATO allies worried at the prospect of Russia invading Ukraine. (AP Photo/Nathan Posner)

As Russian forces entered the capital city of Kiev, Ukraine, the Ukrainian defense minister estimated that hundreds of Russian soldiers had died in the conflict so far. Ukraine has reported over 137 casualties, including civilians. A first attempt at holding talks between Kiev and Moscow failed on Friday. Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has since appealed to Israel’s Prime Minister Naftali Bennett to mediate in the conflict.

On Friday, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg announced the deployment, for the first time, of NATO’s 40,000-troop-strong rapid response force, created in 2003.

“Yesterday, NATO Allies activated our defense plans,” Stoltenberg said on Friday, adding that the alliance’s forces would be positioned “on land, at sea, and in the air.”

“The United States, Canada and European Allies have deployed thousands more troops to the eastern part of the Alliance,” Stoltenberg continued. “We have over 100 jets at high alert operating in over 30 different locations. And over 120 ships from the High North to the Mediterranean. Including three strike carrier groups.”

Stoltenberg added, “We speak about thousands of troops. We speak about air and maritime capabilities. They are only actually part of the standing naval groups. We have many planes operating in the eastern part of the Alliance. And then, several Allies have partly already assigned troops and forces to the NATO Response Force.”

Stoltenberg called Russia’s actions “the gravest threat to Euro-Atlantic security in decades,” declaring, “We will do whatever it takes to defend every ally and every inch of NATO territory.”

The announcement was hailed by advocates of confrontation with Russia. “Hearing now that NATO’s Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF) has been activated. Excellent news,” tweeted former US Ambassador to Russia and arch-warmonger Michael McFaul.

UK Defense Minister James Heappey announced that the UK would send armed forces to Estonia “earlier than planned,” with the Royal Welsh battle group arriving in the country shortly. A further 1,000 UK troops will be on standby “to support Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Poland,” Heappey said.

But the defense minister warned of the dangers of an open engagement between NATO and Russia, observing that the conflict could quickly become “existential.”

Both in the UK and the US, significant forces within the political establishment are advocating for just such an “existential” conflict.

Heappey’s warnings were directed to MPs advocating for an establishment of a no-fly zone over Ukraine, meaning that NATO surface-to-air missiles and aircraft would engage and attempt to shoot down Russian combat planes.

The imposition of a no-fly zone “would be a significant and real help for the people of Ukraine,” said Tory MP Peter Bone.

In the United States, Congressman Adam Kinzinger demanded that the United States take this measure. “Declare a #NoFlyZone over Ukraine,” Kinzinger tweeted. “History teaches that taking a stand is inevitable and gets more costly with time. We own the skies, Russia cannot hold a candle to our Air power.  Do this. Putin is too dangerous to hope he is satisfied with ‘just Ukraine.’”

The claim that the United States “own(s) the skies” in Eastern Europe is false. Russia operates what is arguably the world’s most advanced Anti-Access and Area Denial (A2/AD) system, which would inflict significant losses on NATO aircraft that sought to engage Russian air forces. If Moscow’s aircraft were to come under attack from sites within NATO territory, Russia could respond with cruise missile strikes on the batteries, triggering NATO Article 5 and starting a world war.

This insane demand won support on both sides of the aisle, with Democratic Party operative Jon Cooper demanding, “The U.S. must declare a no-fly zone in Ukraine—NOW!!”

In an exchange on BBC’s Radio 4 Today, UK Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said that the imposition of a no-fly zone would be an act of war against Russia.

“To do a no-fly zone I would have to put British fighter jets against Russian; NATO would have to declare war on Russia.” This would “trigger a European war,” he said.

Any such war threatens the use of nuclear weapons. As CNN military analyst James “Spider” Marks said on live television Thursday, “I would hate to think that [Vladimir Putin] might think that he can get away with a tactical nuke, and that there wouldn’t be a concomitant response. That then begins the cascading effect of the end of times.”

On Thursday, US President Joe Biden said that 7,000 US troops would deploy to Germany. But the Pentagon clarified that some of them could be forward deployed to Russia’s borders as part of a NATO rapid response force.

Military.com reported, “The U.S. has already deployed about 12,000 troops and equipment such as F-35 Lightning II fighter jets and Apache attack helicopters to Germany, Poland, Romania and the Baltic states. The Pentagon has said more than 11,000 troops have been put on heightened alert for deployment since January, but it could not provide exact figures on Friday of those who remain on alert or have been deployed.”

These developments come as further measures have been taken to shut the Russian population off from the world economy. On Friday, Poland closed its airspace to Russian airlines, while British Airways and Virgin Atlantic have stopped using Russian airspace, Kommersant reported. S&P just downgraded the credit ratings of both Ukraine and Russia.

On Friday, California Democrat Eric Swalwell said that “kicking every Russian student out of the United States … should … be on the table.”

While the United States and NATO governments hope to benefit, for both domestic and geopolitical reasons, from a Russian invasion of Ukraine, the war threatens to have massive and incalculable consequences not only for the populations of that region but for all of humanity.

25 Feb 2022

Shanghai Government Scholarships 2022/2023

Application Deadline: May 2022

Eligible Countries: International

To be taken at (country): China

Eligible Field of Study:

  1. Bachelor’s degree programs
  2. Master’s degree programs (except MBA and MTCSOL*)
    • Note: MBA is short for Master of Business Administration;
    • MTCSOL refers to Master of Teaching Chinese to Speakers of Other Languages.
  3. Doctoral degree programs

Type: Bachelors, Masters and PhD

Eligibility for Shanghai Government Scholarships: 

  1. Be a non-Chinese citizen in good health.
  2. Not be an enrolled degree student in Chinese universities at the time of application.
  3. Be a high school graduate under the age of 25 when applying for the undergraduate programs;
  4. Be a master’s degree holder under the age of 40 when applying for doctoral programs.
  5. Be a bachelor’s degree holder under the age of 35 when applying for master’s programs.
  6. 3.Language proficiency: new HSK5 level (scored at least 180)

Value of Shanghai Government Scholarships: The scholarship covers tuition waiver and comprehensive medical insurance for bachelor’s students; it covers tuition waiver, accommodation, stipend, and comprehensive medical insurance for master’s students and doctoral students.

Duration of Scholarship: 

  1. Bachelor’s Degree Program: 4 to 5 years
  2. Master’s degree programs: 2 to 3 years
  3. Doctoral degree programs: 3 to 4 years

How to Apply for Shanghai Government Scholarships: 

Step 1 – Choose School and the Type of Scholarship

Step 2 – Submit the program application, print out the degree program application form and sign on it.

Step 3 – Present the supporting documents either by uploading or mail in to the Admission Office by the application deadline

  • It is important to go through all application requirements on the Programme Webpage see link below) before applying

Visit Program Webpage for details

HERE and here (We have used these schools as guide. See link to other Shanghai schools in Program Webpage (above)).

Study in Canada Scholarships 2022/2023

Application Deadline: 22nd March 2022

About the Award: The Study in Canada Scholarships program is facilitated through institutional collaborations and student exchange agreements between post-secondary institutions in Canada and in the following eligible countries/territories: Algeria, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Jordan, Kenya, Libya, Morocco, Nepal, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Taiwan, Tanzania, Tunisia, Turkey, Uganda, and Ukraine. These agreements are created between colleges, technical or vocational institutes and universities. Students, hereby referred to as “candidates”, must be registered as full-time students in their home institution at the time of application and during the entire duration of their study or research stay in Canada.

Type: Secondary, Undergraduate, Masters

Eligibility for Study in Canada Scholarships: Candidates must be citizens of one of the following eligible countries/territories:

  • Asia: Bangladesh, Nepal, Taiwan
  • Europe: Turkey, Ukraine
  • Middle East and North Africa: Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Libya, Morocco, Tunisia  
  • Sub-Saharan Africa: Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Tanzania, Uganda;

Candidates:

  • must be enrolled as full-time students at post-secondary institutions in the eligible countries/territories and paying any tuition fees required by these institutions at the time of application and for the full duration of the exchange;
  • who hold Canadian citizenship or permanent residency, or who have a pending application for permanent residency in Canada are not eligible;
  • already participating in an exchange scholarship program funded by the Government of Canada are not eligible; and
  • already enrolled in a program at a Canadian post-secondary institution are not eligible.

Terms and conditions

The following terms and conditions must be met during the period of the scholarship.

The Canadian post-secondary institution must:

  • be a Designated Learning Institution (DLI);
  • waive tuition and/or administrative fees for scholarship recipients, as selected students must be registered full-time and paying tuition to their home institution;
  • inform both the candidate and their home institution of any mandatory fees that, in exceptional cases, cannot be waived, prior to applying for a scholarship on the candidate’s behalf;
  • enter into an agreement with the recipient stating that:
    • funding for the scholarship is provided by the Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development (DFATD);
    • the recipient must provide the Canadian institution with records to account for major expenses such as travel and lodging; and
    • the recipient agrees to have their contact information shared with DFATD, for reasons such as: to be invited to join the Government of Canada Scholars’ Alumni Association (GCSAA), to attend events organized by the Canadian Embassy, High Commission or Canadian Trade Office in their home country/territory and by DFATD in Canada, or for promotional and statistical purposes; and
  • submit qualitative and quantitative reports during the scholarship period.

Scholarship recipients:

  • must engage in full-time studies or research as defined by the Canadian institution;
  • must be proficient in the language of instruction at the Canadian institution (English or French) before their arrival in Canada, as the scholarship does not cover language training. Language requirements are set by each Canadian institution;
  • may not hold any other scholarship granted by the Government of Canada;
  • carrying out a semester-based study exchange must arrive in Canada by September for the fall semester or by January for the winter semester;
  • conducting research must arrive in Canada for the uptake of their award between June 1, 2021 but no later than February 1, 2022. Failure to arrive during this time may result in the cancellation of the scholarship. In exceptional cases, and with prior approval from DFATD, the arrival deadline may be extended to March 1, 2022;
  • enrolled in pharmacy, medicine, dentistry or other health fields are excluded from clinical training or clinically-oriented research involving direct patient-care;
  • must ensure that they have appropriate health insurance for the full duration of the scholarship, as per the policies of the Canadian institution;
  • must focus primarily on full-time studies or research during their stay in Canada; and
  • are expected to return to their home institutions after the scholarship period in order to complete their studies.

Eligible Countries: See Eligibility (above)

To be Taken at (Country): Canada

Number of Awards: At least 50

Value of Study in Canada Scholarships: The Canadian institution will receive funding from DFATD for all successful candidates in the form of a contribution agreement and will be responsible for providing the funds to scholarship recipients.

The scholarship value varies depending on the duration of studies:

  • CAD 10,200  for college, undergraduate or graduate students (Master’s and PhD) for a minimum of four months or one academic term of study or research; or
  • CAD 12,700 for graduate students (Master’s and PhD) for a period of five to six months of study or research.

In addition to the funds allocated to the recipients by DFATD, the Canadian host institution may also claim CAD 500 per scholarship recipient to assist with administrative costs once the scholarship recipient arrives in Canada.

Eligible expenses: Canadian institutions will disburse scholarship funds to the scholarship recipient to contribute to the following costs:

  • visa or study/work permit fees;
  • airfare, for the scholarship recipient only, to travel to Canada by the most direct and economical route and return airfare upon completion of the scholarship;
  • health insurance;
  • living expenses, such as accommodation, utilities and food;
  • ground public transportation, including a public transportation pass; and
  • books and supplies required for the recipient’s study or research, excluding computers and other equipment.

How to Apply for Study in Canada Scholarships: Only Canadian institutions can submit applications on behalf of candidates. They may choose to set their own internal deadline to receive supporting documents.

  • It is important to go through all application requirements in the Award Webpage (see Link below) before applying.

Visit Award Webpage for Details

Important Notes:

  • Applications at the college or undergraduate levels must be accompanied by a valid student exchange agreement between the Canadian institution and the candidate’s home institution. The agreement must state that tuition fees are waived for scholarship recipients. College or undergraduate applications for research traineeships or internships at Canadian institutions with no exchange agreements or MOUs with the candidates’ home institutions are also accepted. Such applications must be accompanied by a letter issued by the Canadian institution’s international office or equivalent, linking the application to a specific international research collaboration, naming the Canadian supervisor who has agreed to mentor the student during the scholarship period, and confirming that tuition fees, if any, will be waived for the recipient. Such a letter must be uploaded in lieu of an inter-institutional agreement. 
  • For graduate applications, an inter-institutional agreement is desirable but not mandatory. If there is no existing exchange agreement, graduate applications which involve a new or established collaboration between professors from a Canadian institution and the candidate’s home institution will be accepted.
  • Applications submitted directly by a candidate or their home institution will not be accepted.
  • Scholarships cannot be deferred and are not renewable.
  • Scholarships are not taxable for either the Canadian institution or the scholarship recipient.

Welcome to the New ‘New World Order’

Dave Lindorff


The Western nations and especially the United States awoke today to a new world today.

After decades of hearing US politicians boastingly describe the US as the “exceptional nation,” justifying its repeated violation of international law with invasions of Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Panama, Grenada, Lebanon, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, El Salvador, and “regime change interventions in a host of other countries, because it could, all the while telling the rest of the nations of the world that they had to strictly obey the “rules-based order” of international relations, that countries do not invade or violate the borders of other countries, suddenly there is another nation that has decided it is “exceptional.”

Vladimir Putin’s Russia has simply flaunted international law and launched an all-out war on Ukraine, a nation (the largest in Europe geographically) bordering it in eastern Europe.

We need not go into the justifications Putin has offered. They are as invalid as the ones given by the US for its invasion of Iraq and for its two-decade-long war on Afghanistan, for its invasion and decade-long war on Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, for its mining of the harbor in Nicaragua and the funding and arming of a Contra army to create mayhem in that county from sanctuaries in neighboring Honduras, and on and on.

We have lived in a world for decades where the US has had free rein to ignore international law, the World Court and the UN Charter, because it has had a military power that no nation could contest. Raw ugly power was always the real justification for American “exceptionalism.”

Now we’re seeing Russia, its military over the last 30 years since the dissolution of the Soviet Union restored to a point where, if not as imposing and as far-reaching as the US, it is clearly the most powerful force in Europe, has shown that it will do what it wants in its own neighborhood — international law be damned.

And, aside from the impotent imposing of economic sanctions on Russia and on its leaders and oligarch supporters, the US has admitted there is nothing it or its NATO puppet states can do,

Of course the US and its NATO allies could go to war against Russia, but nobody wants to do that. Firstly, it would mean massive destruction in any European states involved in such fighting, but secondly, everyone recognizes that such a war would very quickly go nuclear, either right away or very soon afterwards once one army, either the Russian one or the US one, began to lose. And once nuclear weapons, even small tactical ones on battlefields, get used, the big ones — city-destroyer and nation-destroyer thermonuclear bombs — won’t be far behind.

It’s a good sign that the world, including the US and Russia, seem to recognize this as evidenced by a notable absence of panic about a nuclear war in either country or in the nations of Europe where such a world-ending war would likely start. (Amazon is not experiencing a rush of orders for fallout shelters, and thankfully has no such product on offer on its website.)

Even with the Russian military quickly rolling over all of Ukraine, President Biden, whose administration stirred up this crisis by refusing to recognize Russia’s legitimate concern about an aggressive eastward spread of new anti-Russian NATO member nations right up to Russia’s borders, continuing to insist on Ukraine’s supposed god-given right to decide to apply for NATO membership, has shown the good sense of reiterating, even confronted with an all-out Russian invasion of Ukraine, that US and NATO forces would not move to defend Ukraine militarily.

With this recognition, Russia has been effectively recognized, like the US, as an “exceptional nation” — one that can act illegally in its own interest at least within a sphere in which its military is dominant.

China is surely looking at this new “new world order” intently. It too has a very powerful military, probably at this point far more powerful than Russia’s and rivaling the US’s once unassailable military, especially within its own local region.

Should Taiwan be worried? I would say yes, indeed. The reality is that Putin’s invasion of Ukraine almost certainly was discussed and approved in advance by China’s paramount leader Xi Jinping. It is Russia’s recent treaty with China, almost a mutual assistance pact, and China’s strong economic links to Russia, that make it possible for Putin and Russia to ignore US-led sanctions. If Russia cannot sell its natural gas and oil to its main market, Europe, because of US sanctions, China will happily buy it, assuring it long-term cheap access to those critical fuel supplies.

Meanwhile, with Russia now having demonstrated that might makes right, as the US has long known, making it the basis of its own foreign policy, China may also decide that the time is right to join as a third “exceptional nation.”

As with Russia in the case of Ukraine, the leadership in Beijing is confident that whatever agreements it has with Taiwan, the US will not go to war with China should Beijing order the Peoples Liberation Army to take over what Beijing has long considered a “renegade province” of China. My guess would be hat this would be done in stages, first with the capture of the two small offshore islands off the coast of Fujian, Quemoy nd Matsu. That would be followed by a PLA takeover of the Penghu An Islands situated midway across the Taiwan Strait between Fujian and Taiwan. At that point Taiwan would have a choice: some kind of negotiation giving it some local autonomy while conceding its status as part of China, or an invasion.

Taiwan cannot expect to be saved by US military intervention, and trying to fight China’s military whether on its own or with US support would be a pointless and ruinous failure.

It is today a new world with a new “new world order.” This time, instead of a “sole superpower,” we have entered multipolar world in which military and economic might will determine what actions a powerful country can get away with. Instead of one country having all that power, there are now three countries that have it. And at least for now, clumsy foreign policy actions on the part of a string of hubristic and short-sighted US presidential administrations of both political parties beginning with the Clinton or even Carter administration, have assured that two of those countries — Russia and China — are close partners.

It may be too late, but one can hope that faced with this likely unstable stalemate, the US will eventually concede that it is no longer “exceptional,” and will support a world order operating according to universally accepted standards defined by the United Nations and adjudicated through the World Court. That may be a pipe-dream at this point, but the alternative is not pretty, as a tripolar world of enemy or rival states — the US, Russia and China — assert their power where they can, bumping up against each other at some point, and creating havoc and bloodshed in those unfortunate countries that happen to be in the middle of these rivalries.